Best Practices for Building Trust in Customer Feedback

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  • View profile for Tim Best

    CEO at RecruitMilitary | Empowering the military community through meaningful career opportunities from top companies

    20,590 followers

    The other day, something rare happened. An employer gave us a mediocre review after an event. Not bad, just not the level of satisfaction we’re used to. We didn’t dwell on it - we leaned into it. Here’s what we do when we get constructive feedback: First, we share it with the team - immediately. Everyone needs to know where we can improve. Then, we take action. In this case, we reached out to the employer directly and said: "Tell us everything. What happened? How could we do better?" The employer’s response was eye-opening. First, the issue turned out to be much smaller than we initially thought - a minor hiccup, really. Second, the employer was blown away by how seriously we took their input. They appreciated that we didn’t just listen - we acted. By the end of the conversation, they were not only satisfied but impressed. Our quick response turned a so-so review into a moment of trust and connection. Moments like this are why we have a clear process for handling feedback: Share it. Act on it. Improve from it. It’s more than customer service - it’s about showing that we value input and take it seriously. Internally, it reinforces a culture of accountability and action. Externally, it builds trust and loyalty. If you’re serious about serving your customers, don’t just hear them. Act. It’s the difference between good service and great relationships.

  • View profile for Oji Udezue

    AI Product Expert. Ex Chief Product Officer @ Typeform. Ex CPO @ Calendly. Ex Product Lead @ Twitter (Creators, Tweets, DMs, Spaces, Communities, B2B ads), @Atlassian, @ Microsoft. Boards.

    15,938 followers

    Closing the loop on customer feedback is an art — but a crucial one for driving product growth. Here's how to do it: 1. Open the channels Make it seamless for customers to submit feedback through your product, community, and other touchpoints. 2. Analyze and prioritize Identify the highest-impact issues across your feedback sources. Prioritize those areas accordingly. 3. Acknowledge receipt Even a simple, automated response goes a long way in making customers feel heard when they take the time to share thoughts. 4. Provide updates Keep the conversation going. Follow up with customers who submitted feedback to share how you're addressing their issue. 5. Implement and iterate Take action on the prioritized issues. Continuously improve based on renewed feedback. The bottom line: Customers who feel listened to are more invested in your success. Treat their feedback as a dialogue, not a monologue.

  • View profile for Mike Hays

    Ghostwriter & Messaging Strategist helping leaders achieve 70% opt-ins with a Microstory Journey using the 3-Minute Story Blueprint to build trust and convert hesitant prospects into eager customers.

    26,297 followers

    Your customers don’t trust you (yet)… here’s how to fix that. Earning trust isn’t about flashy marketing or big promises— it’s about what you do every single day. Here’s the thing: Without trust, your business is running on fumes. Customers are smarter than ever. They can spot insincerity from a mile away. And if they don’t trust you or worse, if they don’t feel valued they’ll go elsewhere. So how do you earn their trust, make them feel truly valued, and create engagement that keeps them coming back? Here’s what works: 1. Start by listening (and act on what you hear).   * Run surveys, host focus groups, or jump on 1:1 calls with your customers.   * Pay attention to their pain points, frustrations, and needs.   * Most importantly: Implement their feedback. Listening without action destroys trust faster than ignoring them altogether. 2. Personalize every interaction.   * Address your customers by name.   * Tailor your messaging, offers, or coaching to meet their unique needs.   * Remember: No one wants to feel like a number in your CRM. 3. Be transparent—even when it’s uncomfortable.   * Made a mistake? Own it immediately.   * Raising prices? Explain why.   * Customers value honesty, even when the truth is hard to hear. 4. Engage meaningfully by creating value.   * Share free resources, Q&As, or tips they can use immediately.   * Celebrate their wins—whether big or small.   * Build community spaces for connection (think LinkedIn groups, Slack, or live events). 5. Go above and beyond with small, thoughtful gestures.   * Send handwritten thank-you notes.   * Offer surprise perks, like early access or exclusive discounts.   * Follow up on personal details they’ve shared with you (yes, remembering their kid’s soccer game matters). 6. Stay consistent.   * Deliver on your promises every time.   * Focus on quality over quantity—customers will forgive a missed update, but not mediocrity.   * Regularly measure satisfaction and make improvements where needed. Building trust isn’t rocket science—but it does take effort. Focus on these six steps, and you won’t just earn trust. You’ll build relationships that last a lifetime. Which of these are you already doing?
 Let me know in the comments I’d love to hear how you earn your customers’ trust. ♻️ Share if you wan to build trust in your market 🔔 Follow Mike Hays for more trust tips.

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